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Is .Net development really so outre?

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  • Y yoni at jefco

    Hi Y'all I have a question; I have been a purely Microsoft platform developer my whole career (14 yrs VB->VB.Net->c#, ASP.net, SQl server). I'm happy with it, and I think I get good work done. From reading the codeproject daily newsletter,though, and especially most of the comments of the articles posted therein, I feel somewhat of a troglodyte. I'm kind of a mushroom- I don't know really know much of what's going on in the bright "real world", so I'm interested in the opinions of the intelligent and handsome members of this lounge; Is MS platform development really on the way out? What pct of real-world (Enterprise, mission critical) systems being developed today do you think are MS vs. Non-MS? Cheers, YS

    N Offline
    N Offline
    Nish Nishant
    wrote on last edited by
    #2

    Woah - had to look up the dictionary twice there! You Afghanis sure speak some weird dialect ;P

    Regards, Nish


    My technology blog: voidnish.wordpress.com (recently moved from web-host to wordpress)

    Y 2 Replies Last reply
    0
    • Y yoni at jefco

      Hi Y'all I have a question; I have been a purely Microsoft platform developer my whole career (14 yrs VB->VB.Net->c#, ASP.net, SQl server). I'm happy with it, and I think I get good work done. From reading the codeproject daily newsletter,though, and especially most of the comments of the articles posted therein, I feel somewhat of a troglodyte. I'm kind of a mushroom- I don't know really know much of what's going on in the bright "real world", so I'm interested in the opinions of the intelligent and handsome members of this lounge; Is MS platform development really on the way out? What pct of real-world (Enterprise, mission critical) systems being developed today do you think are MS vs. Non-MS? Cheers, YS

      C Offline
      C Offline
      Chris Losinger
      wrote on last edited by
      #3

      yoni at jefco wrote:

      Is MS platform development really on the way out?

      people have been saying it is for the last decade or so. hasn't happened yet.

      image processing toolkits | batch image processing

      B 1 Reply Last reply
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      • C Chris Losinger

        yoni at jefco wrote:

        Is MS platform development really on the way out?

        people have been saying it is for the last decade or so. hasn't happened yet.

        image processing toolkits | batch image processing

        B Offline
        B Offline
        Bassam Abdul Baki
        wrote on last edited by
        #4

        Chris Losinger wrote:

        yoni at jefco wrote:

        Is MS platform development really on the way out?

        people have been saying it is for the last decade or so. hasn't happened yet.

        Quantity or quality-wise? ;P

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        • Y yoni at jefco

          Hi Y'all I have a question; I have been a purely Microsoft platform developer my whole career (14 yrs VB->VB.Net->c#, ASP.net, SQl server). I'm happy with it, and I think I get good work done. From reading the codeproject daily newsletter,though, and especially most of the comments of the articles posted therein, I feel somewhat of a troglodyte. I'm kind of a mushroom- I don't know really know much of what's going on in the bright "real world", so I'm interested in the opinions of the intelligent and handsome members of this lounge; Is MS platform development really on the way out? What pct of real-world (Enterprise, mission critical) systems being developed today do you think are MS vs. Non-MS? Cheers, YS

          C Offline
          C Offline
          Chris Meech
          wrote on last edited by
          #5

          yoni at jefco wrote:

          so I'm interested in the opinions of the intelligent and handsome members of this lounge;

          Ooops. I guess that leaves me out. :)

          Chris Meech I am Canadian. [heard in a local bar] In theory there is no difference between theory and practice. In practice there is. [Yogi Berra]

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          • B Bassam Abdul Baki

            Chris Losinger wrote:

            yoni at jefco wrote:

            Is MS platform development really on the way out?

            people have been saying it is for the last decade or so. hasn't happened yet.

            Quantity or quality-wise? ;P

            Y Offline
            Y Offline
            yoni at jefco
            wrote on last edited by
            #6

            Actually, I have to admit I'm interested in Quantity-wise, i.e. job$. Purity of coding methodologies dont pay the bills. And the answer that "people have been saying it for a decade" is really kind of meaningless. That doesn't mean it can't happen , and perhaps relatively soon (another decade, say). The world is a radically different place than it was 10 years ago. I was more interested in actual impressions of the overall development landscape. YS

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            • N Nish Nishant

              Woah - had to look up the dictionary twice there! You Afghanis sure speak some weird dialect ;P

              Regards, Nish


              My technology blog: voidnish.wordpress.com (recently moved from web-host to wordpress)

              Y Offline
              Y Offline
              yoni at jefco
              wrote on last edited by
              #7

              Me happy you get new word things now. grunt. YS

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              • Y yoni at jefco

                Me happy you get new word things now. grunt. YS

                N Offline
                N Offline
                Nish Nishant
                wrote on last edited by
                #8

                yoni at jefco wrote:

                Me happy you get new word things now. grunt.

                Grunt back. :-D

                Regards, Nish


                My technology blog: voidnish.wordpress.com (recently moved from web-host to wordpress)

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                • Y yoni at jefco

                  Hi Y'all I have a question; I have been a purely Microsoft platform developer my whole career (14 yrs VB->VB.Net->c#, ASP.net, SQl server). I'm happy with it, and I think I get good work done. From reading the codeproject daily newsletter,though, and especially most of the comments of the articles posted therein, I feel somewhat of a troglodyte. I'm kind of a mushroom- I don't know really know much of what's going on in the bright "real world", so I'm interested in the opinions of the intelligent and handsome members of this lounge; Is MS platform development really on the way out? What pct of real-world (Enterprise, mission critical) systems being developed today do you think are MS vs. Non-MS? Cheers, YS

                  R Offline
                  R Offline
                  R Giskard Reventlov
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #9

                  yoni at jefco wrote:

                  Is MS platform development really on the way out?

                  No.

                  yoni at jefco wrote:

                  What pct of real-world (Enterprise, mission critical) systems being developed today do you think are MS vs. Non-MS?

                  63.257%

                  "If you think it's expensive to hire a professional to do the job, wait until you hire an amateur." Red Adair. nils illegitimus carborundum me, me, me

                  1 Reply Last reply
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                  • Y yoni at jefco

                    Hi Y'all I have a question; I have been a purely Microsoft platform developer my whole career (14 yrs VB->VB.Net->c#, ASP.net, SQl server). I'm happy with it, and I think I get good work done. From reading the codeproject daily newsletter,though, and especially most of the comments of the articles posted therein, I feel somewhat of a troglodyte. I'm kind of a mushroom- I don't know really know much of what's going on in the bright "real world", so I'm interested in the opinions of the intelligent and handsome members of this lounge; Is MS platform development really on the way out? What pct of real-world (Enterprise, mission critical) systems being developed today do you think are MS vs. Non-MS? Cheers, YS

                    E Offline
                    E Offline
                    ebresie
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #10

                    Hmmmm...they've been saying Java and COBOL are on the out too...There are still Java and COBOL programmers ;P But seriously...it depends where you are and who you are working for. Some still have .NET just as other still have Java. MS products are still used around the world, so it won't go away any time soon. MS comes back every so often with rebranded product or comes out with something slightly new like Azure.. There is a move towards more "Cloud" / "Web" based (HTML5, Flash, Silverlight, JavaFX, etc) so with the Microsoft Azure push your skills won't be a lost cause.

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                    • E ebresie

                      Hmmmm...they've been saying Java and COBOL are on the out too...There are still Java and COBOL programmers ;P But seriously...it depends where you are and who you are working for. Some still have .NET just as other still have Java. MS products are still used around the world, so it won't go away any time soon. MS comes back every so often with rebranded product or comes out with something slightly new like Azure.. There is a move towards more "Cloud" / "Web" based (HTML5, Flash, Silverlight, JavaFX, etc) so with the Microsoft Azure push your skills won't be a lost cause.

                      Y Offline
                      Y Offline
                      yoni at jefco
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #11

                      ebresie wrote:

                      There are still Java and COBOL programmers

                      I hope a) You would not use that reasoning to advise someone to take up COBOL programming for a living b) If so, that you are not the career counselor at my son's school. I think I can get a job churning my own butter too, if I apply at the correct locations in Amish Country. YS

                      modified on Monday, September 13, 2010 2:49 PM

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                      • Y yoni at jefco

                        Hi Y'all I have a question; I have been a purely Microsoft platform developer my whole career (14 yrs VB->VB.Net->c#, ASP.net, SQl server). I'm happy with it, and I think I get good work done. From reading the codeproject daily newsletter,though, and especially most of the comments of the articles posted therein, I feel somewhat of a troglodyte. I'm kind of a mushroom- I don't know really know much of what's going on in the bright "real world", so I'm interested in the opinions of the intelligent and handsome members of this lounge; Is MS platform development really on the way out? What pct of real-world (Enterprise, mission critical) systems being developed today do you think are MS vs. Non-MS? Cheers, YS

                        D Offline
                        D Offline
                        Dr Walt Fair PE
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #12

                        yoni at jefco wrote:

                        ... I'm interested in the opinions of the intelligent and handsome members of this lounge; ...

                        As the handsome member, I'm happy to offer my opinion.

                        yoni at jefco wrote:

                        Is MS platform development really on the way out? What pct of real-world (Enterprise, mission critical) systems being developed today do you think are MS vs. Non-MS?

                        Yeah, everything is on its way out. The question is how fast. As long as there are MS platforms, there will be a need for MS platform developers. As far as other systems, I have no real numbers, but all of my clients want Windows stuff and Linux/Unix isn't in the mix for desktop software. But anyway, if you understand software and programming, moving to a dfferent platform isn't all the hard. The key concepts are about the same, the compilers take care of the low level differences. Mainly the I/O and user interaction details change.

                        CQ de W5ALT

                        Walt Fair, Jr., P. E. Comport Computing Specializing in Technical Engineering Software

                        R 1 Reply Last reply
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                        • D Dr Walt Fair PE

                          yoni at jefco wrote:

                          ... I'm interested in the opinions of the intelligent and handsome members of this lounge; ...

                          As the handsome member, I'm happy to offer my opinion.

                          yoni at jefco wrote:

                          Is MS platform development really on the way out? What pct of real-world (Enterprise, mission critical) systems being developed today do you think are MS vs. Non-MS?

                          Yeah, everything is on its way out. The question is how fast. As long as there are MS platforms, there will be a need for MS platform developers. As far as other systems, I have no real numbers, but all of my clients want Windows stuff and Linux/Unix isn't in the mix for desktop software. But anyway, if you understand software and programming, moving to a dfferent platform isn't all the hard. The key concepts are about the same, the compilers take care of the low level differences. Mainly the I/O and user interaction details change.

                          CQ de W5ALT

                          Walt Fair, Jr., P. E. Comport Computing Specializing in Technical Engineering Software

                          R Offline
                          R Offline
                          Rajesh R Subramanian
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #13

                          Walt Fair, Jr. wrote:

                          As the handsome member, I'm happy to offer my opinion.

                          Guess why didn't I reply. He said intelligent AND handsome. :laugh:

                          There are some really weird people on this planet - MIM.

                          D 1 Reply Last reply
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                          • Y yoni at jefco

                            Hi Y'all I have a question; I have been a purely Microsoft platform developer my whole career (14 yrs VB->VB.Net->c#, ASP.net, SQl server). I'm happy with it, and I think I get good work done. From reading the codeproject daily newsletter,though, and especially most of the comments of the articles posted therein, I feel somewhat of a troglodyte. I'm kind of a mushroom- I don't know really know much of what's going on in the bright "real world", so I'm interested in the opinions of the intelligent and handsome members of this lounge; Is MS platform development really on the way out? What pct of real-world (Enterprise, mission critical) systems being developed today do you think are MS vs. Non-MS? Cheers, YS

                            P Offline
                            P Offline
                            pseudonym67
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #14

                            As far as I understand it things go something like this. Once upon a time back around the dawn of the year two thousand or so people could make vast fortunes by selling you virtual old rope on the internets. Then the big bang happened and people realised that the old rope was only virtual old rope and they'd lost all their money. But the thing was the bigwigs in tech companies thought "There must be a way to make huge amounts of money out of these internet thingies" So they set about selling digital copies of everything from music to toilet roll and thus everyone said the pc was dead. And the bigwigs looked at what they had done and thought it was good. So they said "There must be more ways to make money out these dumb err valued customers maybe we can rent them some virtual old rope or something, instead of selling them it outright." And everyone predicted the pc was dead. At the moment there's more money to be had with internet virtual old rope and I hear virtual snake oils going to be big next year. That and writing toy apps for retarded watches is a good money spinner these days. Though apparently apple's nano can now tell the time too. I suspect there will be steady work for standard pc fare in the future though not much will happen in the way of innovation as all the money is being thrown at the quick buck earners. Not that I personally feel there has been any real innovation in pc development for the last 10-20 years. It's mostly been different ways to write exactly the same thing. Though I should mention that I haven't got round to reading that book I bought about wpf yet and apparently its a dead dog already. Pity it's a Petzold too.

                            pseudonym67 My Articles[^] Personal Music Player[^]

                            H Y P 3 Replies Last reply
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                            • Y yoni at jefco

                              Hi Y'all I have a question; I have been a purely Microsoft platform developer my whole career (14 yrs VB->VB.Net->c#, ASP.net, SQl server). I'm happy with it, and I think I get good work done. From reading the codeproject daily newsletter,though, and especially most of the comments of the articles posted therein, I feel somewhat of a troglodyte. I'm kind of a mushroom- I don't know really know much of what's going on in the bright "real world", so I'm interested in the opinions of the intelligent and handsome members of this lounge; Is MS platform development really on the way out? What pct of real-world (Enterprise, mission critical) systems being developed today do you think are MS vs. Non-MS? Cheers, YS

                              T Offline
                              T Offline
                              Todd Smith
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #15

                              Innovation has largely been happening outside of the .NET world so that what gets most of the spotlight. And most of those innovations are not built with .NET tools. The MS platform however still seems to be the goto platform (pun) for business apps. And those change at a rather slow pace so I would imagine the MS platform surviving for a while. Who knows in 10yrs time.

                              Todd Smith

                              P Y 2 Replies Last reply
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                              • P pseudonym67

                                As far as I understand it things go something like this. Once upon a time back around the dawn of the year two thousand or so people could make vast fortunes by selling you virtual old rope on the internets. Then the big bang happened and people realised that the old rope was only virtual old rope and they'd lost all their money. But the thing was the bigwigs in tech companies thought "There must be a way to make huge amounts of money out of these internet thingies" So they set about selling digital copies of everything from music to toilet roll and thus everyone said the pc was dead. And the bigwigs looked at what they had done and thought it was good. So they said "There must be more ways to make money out these dumb err valued customers maybe we can rent them some virtual old rope or something, instead of selling them it outright." And everyone predicted the pc was dead. At the moment there's more money to be had with internet virtual old rope and I hear virtual snake oils going to be big next year. That and writing toy apps for retarded watches is a good money spinner these days. Though apparently apple's nano can now tell the time too. I suspect there will be steady work for standard pc fare in the future though not much will happen in the way of innovation as all the money is being thrown at the quick buck earners. Not that I personally feel there has been any real innovation in pc development for the last 10-20 years. It's mostly been different ways to write exactly the same thing. Though I should mention that I haven't got round to reading that book I bought about wpf yet and apparently its a dead dog already. Pity it's a Petzold too.

                                pseudonym67 My Articles[^] Personal Music Player[^]

                                H Offline
                                H Offline
                                Henry Minute
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #16

                                In case you haven't already seen it, check out his All-XAML Clock[^].

                                Henry Minute Do not read medical books! You could die of a misprint. - Mark Twain Girl: (staring) "Why do you need an icy cucumber?" “I want to report a fraud. The government is lying to us all.”

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                                • R Rajesh R Subramanian

                                  Walt Fair, Jr. wrote:

                                  As the handsome member, I'm happy to offer my opinion.

                                  Guess why didn't I reply. He said intelligent AND handsome. :laugh:

                                  There are some really weird people on this planet - MIM.

                                  D Offline
                                  D Offline
                                  Dr Walt Fair PE
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #17

                                  Well, one person's intersection is another person's union.

                                  CQ de W5ALT

                                  Walt Fair, Jr., P. E. Comport Computing Specializing in Technical Engineering Software

                                  1 Reply Last reply
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                                  • Y yoni at jefco

                                    ebresie wrote:

                                    There are still Java and COBOL programmers

                                    I hope a) You would not use that reasoning to advise someone to take up COBOL programming for a living b) If so, that you are not the career counselor at my son's school. I think I can get a job churning my own butter too, if I apply at the correct locations in Amish Country. YS

                                    modified on Monday, September 13, 2010 2:49 PM

                                    D Offline
                                    D Offline
                                    Dan Neely
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #18

                                    yoni at jefco wrote:

                                    "There are still Java and COBOL programmers" I hope a) You would not use that reasoning to advise someone to take up COBOL programming for a living b) If so, that you are not the career counselor at my son's school.

                                    Giant legacy apps never die. With the caveat that you'll be required to work for MegaCorp and deal with the resulting bureaucratic overhead you get high job-security because finding replacements isn't easy and above average pay scales because it's necessary to entice younger devs away from newer shinier tools, or to entice senior devs to continue writing code instead of going into management.

                                    3x12=36 2x12=24 1x12=12 0x12=18

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                                    • Y yoni at jefco

                                      Hi Y'all I have a question; I have been a purely Microsoft platform developer my whole career (14 yrs VB->VB.Net->c#, ASP.net, SQl server). I'm happy with it, and I think I get good work done. From reading the codeproject daily newsletter,though, and especially most of the comments of the articles posted therein, I feel somewhat of a troglodyte. I'm kind of a mushroom- I don't know really know much of what's going on in the bright "real world", so I'm interested in the opinions of the intelligent and handsome members of this lounge; Is MS platform development really on the way out? What pct of real-world (Enterprise, mission critical) systems being developed today do you think are MS vs. Non-MS? Cheers, YS

                                      T Offline
                                      T Offline
                                      Tomz_KV
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #19

                                      Where did you get this idea? The world is changing. So is Microsoft. Although Microsoft is not in its peak anymore, it will take a long time for it to be out. It may never be out but evolve.

                                      TOMZ_KV

                                      Y 1 Reply Last reply
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                                      • P pseudonym67

                                        As far as I understand it things go something like this. Once upon a time back around the dawn of the year two thousand or so people could make vast fortunes by selling you virtual old rope on the internets. Then the big bang happened and people realised that the old rope was only virtual old rope and they'd lost all their money. But the thing was the bigwigs in tech companies thought "There must be a way to make huge amounts of money out of these internet thingies" So they set about selling digital copies of everything from music to toilet roll and thus everyone said the pc was dead. And the bigwigs looked at what they had done and thought it was good. So they said "There must be more ways to make money out these dumb err valued customers maybe we can rent them some virtual old rope or something, instead of selling them it outright." And everyone predicted the pc was dead. At the moment there's more money to be had with internet virtual old rope and I hear virtual snake oils going to be big next year. That and writing toy apps for retarded watches is a good money spinner these days. Though apparently apple's nano can now tell the time too. I suspect there will be steady work for standard pc fare in the future though not much will happen in the way of innovation as all the money is being thrown at the quick buck earners. Not that I personally feel there has been any real innovation in pc development for the last 10-20 years. It's mostly been different ways to write exactly the same thing. Though I should mention that I haven't got round to reading that book I bought about wpf yet and apparently its a dead dog already. Pity it's a Petzold too.

                                        pseudonym67 My Articles[^] Personal Music Player[^]

                                        Y Offline
                                        Y Offline
                                        yoni at jefco
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #20

                                        pseudonym67 wrote:

                                        Though I should mention that I haven't got round to reading that book I bought about wpf yet and apparently its a dead dog already.

                                        Which is caninus mortis? Your book or the WPF platform? I was under the impression that WPF is the official successor to Windows Forms. Even if I am sticking to the MS platform, I would still think it's best practice to keep abreast of Microsoft's own development tools... Not to mention that I think WPF is sweeet. Routed events, control composition , command routing.... [EDIT] Hmmm I guess I'm more of a mushroom than I realized.. http://www.riagenic.com/archives/363[^] I still like WPF though. YS

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                                        • T Tomz_KV

                                          Where did you get this idea? The world is changing. So is Microsoft. Although Microsoft is not in its peak anymore, it will take a long time for it to be out. It may never be out but evolve.

                                          TOMZ_KV

                                          Y Offline
                                          Y Offline
                                          yoni at jefco
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #21

                                          Tomz_KV wrote:

                                          Where did you get this idea?

                                          [Hey, I just noticed that big "Quote Selected Text" button!] Take a sample of any 20 dev related articles from the CodeProject Daily News, and read the comments. That will give you the same idea - the future of development lies not in Redmond. I'm not saying that Microsoft is going away. Just that you can get the feeling that we're second class citizens in the dev world. YS

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